You dont swing because theres a greater statistic that it will be a ball than a strike. And if it is a strike then you will still only have one and get more chances. You have to make the pitcher pitch as many pitches as possible.
3 strikes. 4 balls.
six...3 balls and 3 strikes, or 2 strikes and 4 balls.
When an umpire calls a full count, that means the batter has 3 balls and 2 strikes. A full count (3-2) is the highest number of balls and strikes a batter can get before he is either awarded a base (on balls) or is out (on strikes).
In baseball, this is when the batter has a 'count' of three balls and two strikes. It is called a full count because the batter cannot get another ball or strike without the at bat ending ... one more ball will cause a base on balls (walk) and one more strike will be a strikeout.
In baseball, it would mean three balls and no strikes. In postseason play, it means having a three games to none lead. For example, the A team is 3 and 0 against the B team in the championship series.
IF YOU CAN'T ADD, YOU CAN'T PLAY. Just simple stuff generally, don't worry. 9 innings, 3 outs, 3 strikes, 4 balls, batting averages, other averages
When a batter gets 4 balls before she gets 3 strikes.
3 if you get two strikes or a spare. otherwise, only two.
3 balls and two strikes. Depends on how many fowl tips as a variable. But number of day's I have no clue
in baseball 3 in basketball 0
When the umpire or TV announcer calls the ball and strike count, the balls come first. If you hear the announcer say something like "The count on the batter is 2 and 1" this means there are 2 balls and 1 strike.
In the last frame you get a chance of bowling 3 balls. You can get three strikes, a strike and a spare (a spare is two balls) or a spare and a strike.